4 Best Sights in Victoria, British Columbia

The Butchart Gardens

Brentwood Bay Fodor's choice
The Butchart Gardens
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This stunning 55-acre garden and national historic site has been drawing visitors since it was started in a limestone quarry in 1904. Highlights include the dramatic 70-foot Ross Fountain, the formal Japanese garden, and the intricate Italian garden complete with a gelato stand. Kids will love the old-fashioned carousel and, if they're running, the 45-minute mini electric boat tours around Tod Inlet. From mid-June to mid-September the gardens are illuminated at night with hundreds of hidden lights. In July and August, jazz, blues, and classical musicians play at an outdoor stage each evening, and fireworks draw crowds every Saturday night. The wheelchair- and stroller-accessible site is also home to a seed-and-gift shop, a plant-identification center, two restaurants (one offering traditional afternoon tea), and a coffee shop; you can even call ahead for a picnic basket on fireworks nights. To avoid crowds, come at opening time, in the late afternoon or evening (except busy fireworks Saturday evenings), or between September and June, when the gardens are still stunning and admission rates are reduced. The grounds are especially magical at Christmas, with themed lighting and an ice rink. The gardens are a 20-minute drive north of Downtown; parking is free but fills up on fireworks Saturdays. You can get here by city Bus 75 or 70 from Douglas Street in Downtown Victoria, but service is slow and infrequent. CVS Tours ( 877/578–5552) runs shuttles from Downtown Victoria.

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Abkhazi Garden

Fairfield

Called "the garden that love built," this once-private garden is as fascinating for its history as for its innovative design. The seeds were planted, figuratively, in Paris in the 1920s, when Englishwoman Peggy Pemberton-Carter met exiled Georgian Prince Nicholas Abkhazi. World War II internment camps (his in Germany, hers near Shanghai) interrupted their romance, but they reunited and married in Victoria in 1946. They spent the next 40 years together cultivating their garden. Rescued from developers and now operated by the Land Conservancy of British Columbia, the 1-acre site is recognized as a leading example of west coast horticultural design, resplendent with native Garry Oak trees, Japanese maples, and mature rhododendrons. The teahouse, in the parlor of the modernist home, serves lunch and afternoon tea daily until 4 pm, with reduced hours in winter.

1964 Fairfield Rd., Victoria, British Columbia, V8S 1H4, Canada
778-265–6466
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Rate Includes: By donation, Closed Mon. and Tues. Oct.–Mar.

Government House

Rockland

Take a stroll through the walled grounds and 35 acres of formal gardens at Government House, residence of British Columbia's lieutenant governor, the King's representative in BC. The 19th-century Cary Castle Mews on-site are home to an interpretive center, a costume museum, and a tearoom. The main house is open for guided tours one Saturday a month.

1401 Rockland Ave., Victoria, British Columbia, V8S 1V9, Canada
250-387–2080
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Rate Includes: Free

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Victoria Butterfly Gardens

Brentwood Bay
Thousands of butterflies—of up to 70 different species—flutter freely in an indoor tropical garden that's also home to orchids and carnivorous plants, tropical fish, flamingos, tortoises, geckos, poison dart frogs, and 30 kinds of free-flying tropical birds. The butterflies are sourced from a sustainable farm or bred in-house (displays show the whole life cycle) and all the birds, fish, and animals have been donated or rescued. Be sure to visit the Insectarium, filled with creepy-crawlies from all over the world in a jungle-like setting. The site is a popular stop en route to The Butchart Gardens. Be prepared for tropical temperatures year-round.
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1461 Benvenuto Ave., Victoria, British Columbia, V8M 1R3, Canada
250-652–3822
Sights Details
Rate Includes: C$18, Last admission 1 hr before closing